Your site may be affected by keyword cannibalization also known as internal SEO cannibalization.

Internal SEO cannibalization is one of the major issues if not the single major issue affecting search engine positions. The paradox is that you will usually only tend to notice it if you’re committed to the SEO of your site.

You may think that you have everything in place in terms of links, headers and content etc., but cannibalization can occur at any point, and could hamper your site significantly, losing you strong positions. What we also know is that cannibalization happens to even the very best of sites, with detailed content strategies and acute SEO understanding.

We genuinely believe Pi Datametrics is the best tool for identifying keyword cannibalization, and have identified the 4 main types, which could affect your websites or family of sites:

The 4 types of Cannibalization, as identified by Pi

What is Keyword cannibalization?

SEO Cannibalization occurs when two or more pages within your site compete for the same search term. The conflict occurs when there is duplicate theming and Google cannot determine which page should appear for the given search term.

This usually happens for quite general terms that don’t have a (strong) landing page. Or when a subpage or lower page gets more prominence than a landing page.

Why is Internal keyword cannibalization more endemic now?

SEO Cannibalization has almost always occurred. It stems from the issue of duplicate theming, but has come to the fore now due to higher knowledge of SEO, better on-site content offerings, and changes to Google search results.

Far fewer pages are now returned from a single domain the search results. Ordinarily (though definitely not always) only a few pages from one domain will feature in the top 100 search results (though this can vary depending on the search).

This has become more stringent over the last couple of years. Previously Google would offer multiple clusters of results for a search term. Now you are most likely to see one result per domain.

Based on the profile of each Hotel (above), Google likely won’t be able to decipher which product to offer up in the SERPs, as all are equal in strength and theming. The same would apply if all three had the same amount of internal links and snippet copy too. Below is a working example of this.

Amazon.com suffers from Internal SEO cannibalization in Google UK, for the Search Term “42 Inch TV”

Here is the Amazon.com site in Google UK for the search term “42 Inch TV”. Amazon doesn’t have a landing page for this term, or at least Google isn’t recognising one.

Therefore all these separate product pages (noted by A, B, C, and D) are appearing for this same search term, and swapping positions.

In the chart above there are four separate URLs competing. Notice how when URL “B” is recognised by Google it brings the position in the SERPs down, to approximately page 8.

URL “A” was performing ok until “B” reared its ugly head. Amazon therefore needed to either create a landing page for this term or decide upon one product to feature prominently.

How do you combat Internal SEO cannibalization?

It’s not always easy to work out how to spot cannibalization. However, one quick and simple (though not necessarily fool-proof) way to deal with the cannibalization demonstrated above, would be to introduce a landing page and re-jig the product page theming, to ensure all internal links are pointing at the landing page.

The image above shows that a landing page has been introduced to the “Brighton Hotels” section of our hotel site. None of the pages have any real strength, but the landing page has a direct link from the homepage and is themed around “Brighton Hotels”. It’s therefore stronger than the product pages and will return in the SERPs for the search term “Brighton hotels”.

In this instance, the product page has stronger social backlinks than both the product and landing pages. It would therefore return highest in Google; eclipsing the other pages.

We saw a real example of this in the Daily Mail’s World Cup page. They had the right strategy, i.e. introducing a landing page based on the theme “World Cup”. However, the page was weak. Every new World Cup article published (which amounted to several every day) would usurp the weak landing page. This is because each article would go out on social media and on their RSS feeds and gain huge amounts of links, readers and traffic.

In the eyes of Google, those article pages were stronger for the themed phrase “The World Cup” than the actual landing page. Therefore, the strategy was good, but the execution was poor. Here we see the cannibalization in detail using the Pi SEO platform.

The Daily Mail suffers from cannibalization, as 43 URLs return for the search term “World Cup”

If you see in the column in the bottom right of the above chart, from Feb to June 43 different URLs featured from The Daily Mail for the term “World Cup”. This is acute cannibalization, where one search term is shared between 43 different pages.

The Daily Mail suffers from cannibalization, as article pages conflict with the landing page for the search term “World Cup”

This shows that there is next to zero optimisation, in terms of linking or theming, for this search term on the Mail site – with the landing page doing little to appease this. And remember this search term was one of the most searched phrases that year.

How do you cure keyword cannibalization?

As we’ve seen, having a strong landing page can be the cure in the first instance. However this page needs to have good content and links.

To use the example above we can quickly analyse three of the main pages performing for the search term “World Cup”, in terms of their backlinks and social shares.

Level of on page optimisation for 3 Daily Mail URLs returning for the search term “World Cup”

In the above image a score has been assigned to each URL. As it goes, the top URL (the landing page) has the lowest score for the search term “World Cup”. However, it has accrued some good social links and backlinks. A major difference between the first URL and the other two, is that it has no H1 tag.

Ultimately webmasters and content writers need to confirm which page they want to appear for a given search term. Once the page is decided upon then internal linking, content and backlink (including social) strategies should be devised.

If your product pages have strong link profiles, but continuously cannibalise each other, then in some instances you can 301 redirect them to a single page, to collate these links. You can then go on to create new product pages. This technique takes the view that the sum of all the parts is better than the individual parts.

However, monitoring your assets on a daily basis is the only way using to discover and remedy cannibalization. Pi Datametrics SEO platform is the only tool on the market which gives you a daily, granular view of your URLs, and enables you to deal with such issues in isolation.

If you think your site has been affected by internal cannibalization, book a demo to find out how Pi can help.